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Travels in Burgundy 1999

Day 3

Domaine CLAUDE NOUVEAU (Marchezeuil-Change). A hard-working, conscientious grower, whose wines are always clean and carefully made with well-defined fruit. We start with his white 1997s, which are perfumed, fat and delicious. On to his reds: I have arranged to buy his two Santenays, which both have a really good smell and excellent length.

Day 3

Domaine MICHEL SERVEAU (La Rochepot). M.Serveau tells me that he finds it much easier to sell his reds than his whites, which suits me fine, because his whites in my opinion are outstanding -in fact his Chassagne-Montrachet is a masterpiece: not fat and rich, but with wonderful finesse and a flavour of extraordinary beauty.

Domaine JEAN et GENO MUSSO (Dracy-les-Couches). A new discovery. Certainly the most unpromising domaine I have been to in all my visits to Burgundy. First problem: the Mussos are rather difficult to get hold of. They have a manager, a charming young man called Alain, who can barely write (it was a big struggle for him to write out my bill). Second: the place is almost impossible to find. Dracy-les-Couches is nowhere. The region of the Couchois is quietly tucked away off the beaten Burgundy track. Unlike all the other parts of Burgundy I visit, where there are signs everywhere directing you to the domaines, here there is not a single sign. The village sits in the bottom of a valley, only visible once you get quite close to it. There is one bar (empty). And a really pretty château, with vineyards behind and what looked to me like seriously extensive arrangements for storing wine. It turns out this château is owned by the managing director of one of the large negociant houses in Beaune.

The village was deserted. I couldn't find the domaine. I asked in the bar, and eventually found it: a collection of entirely agricultural-looking farm buildings. Was this really the right place? And then Alain popped out like a pixie from one of the barns and invited me to go and taste. I hadn't seen anything that looked remotely like a cellar yet. I conversationally mentioned that it had been quite difficult to find the domaine - didn't Alain think it might help to put up signs? No, he replied, if they put up signs they'd be overrun by visitors!

If this domaine has cellars I never saw them. The wines - bottled, in cask and in tank - are secreted in various unlikely looking farm buildings around the village. We started with the Aligoté. I was not hopeful. We were in one of those sections of a barn where you might keep a calf that has lost its mother. It was a small space - enough for the half-dozen old oak casks being stored there. Underfoot was a dirt floor. Alain took out his pipette and put a shot of wine into each of our glasses. It was delicious: full, with vivid Aligoté flavour, clean(!) - amazing. Then across the lane, past some dead, decaying old barrels and into the main section of another barn through large doors twelve foot high. Inside there is an enormous metal tank, and an assortment of smaller plastic and resin tanks, including one shaped like a sausage, on wheels. There is hay and straw everywhere. Above the huge metal tank hay is stored. All the wines in here are 1998 reds. What are they going to be like? Was the Aligoté just a freak?

The wines are thrilling, brilliant: fresh, vivid, exuberant, clean(again!) Pinot Noir flavours; the fruit is really pure, clear, well-defined. This is the kind of Burgundy that makes me want to shout "Eureka". Alain tells me a bit about the winemaking. I happen to know the domaine is an organic producer. He talks about their attitude to chaptalisation: minimal - none if at all possible. I'm sure this in part explains why the wines have such true, well-defined flavour. I haven't been taking notes -it all seemed so unpromising. Things were looking exciting now - so exciting I forgot to start taking notes. I have no notes of my visit here. The wines in this barn are waiting to finish their malolactic fermentation before being transferred to oak casks (only old barrels, no new oak here!).

The next surprise: Alain took me off to another section of the original barn where the 1997 reds were still maturing in cask. Everybody else had bottled their 97 reds. The received thinking among most winemakers is that too long in cask dries a wine out and strips it of fruit. We start tasting: all these wines are as fresh, clean and scrummy as you could possibly hope for. How do they do it? It is a mystery.

Parenthetically, I will just say that when I went back the next day, Alain took me to yet another part of the village, where cases of wine, some open, some missing bottles, were chaotically, anarchically scattered about a hay barn. This, presumably, is a bottle store.

It is my last visit of the day, and tonight's hotel is a long drive away. The taste of these remarkable wines stays with me throughout the drive. I've tasted nothing in bottle, but I decide I have to risk buying some.

* * *

Wednesday night I spent in a hotel just south of Dijon. I had been tasting all day and arrived around 9 o'clock. I was so tired I failed to notice the lifesize wooden sculpture in the foyer of a head hunter holding aloft a severed head as he stood astride the rest of the body. I saw it next morning as I came down to breakfast. My room had a sort of supercharged electric heater fixed to the wall right by the bed. There was no switch to adjust the heat or turn it off. It was so hot I couldn't touch it, or I would have been tempted to tear it off the wall and disconnect it by brute force. No amount of open window tempered the heat. I nearly died. I'm not going back there again.

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